Author: Schold, Jesse D.; King, Kristen L.; Husain, S. Ali; Poggio, Emilio D.; Buccini, Laura D.; Mohan, Sumit
Title: COVIDâ€19 mortality among kidney transplant candidates is strongly associated with social determinants of health Cord-id: 38uakfhq Document date: 2021_4_8
ID: 38uakfhq
Snippet: The COVIDâ€19 pandemic has affected all portions of the global population. However, many factors have been shown to be particularly associated with COVIDâ€19 mortality including demographic characteristics, behavior, comorbidities, and social conditions. Kidney transplant candidates may be particularly vulnerable to COVIDâ€19 as many are dialysisâ€dependent and have comorbid conditions. We examined factors associated with COVIDâ€19 mortality among kidney transplant candidates from the Natio
Document: The COVIDâ€19 pandemic has affected all portions of the global population. However, many factors have been shown to be particularly associated with COVIDâ€19 mortality including demographic characteristics, behavior, comorbidities, and social conditions. Kidney transplant candidates may be particularly vulnerable to COVIDâ€19 as many are dialysisâ€dependent and have comorbid conditions. We examined factors associated with COVIDâ€19 mortality among kidney transplant candidates from the National Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients from March 1 to December 1, 2020. We evaluated crude rates and multivariable incident rate ratios (IRR) of COVIDâ€19 mortality. There were 131 659 candidates during the study period with 3534 allâ€cause deaths and 384 denoted a COVIDâ€19 cause (5.00/1000 person years). Factors associated with increased COVIDâ€19 mortality included increased age, males, higher body mass index, and diabetes. In addition, Blacks (IRR = 1.96, 95% C.I.: 1.43–2.69) and Hispanics (IRR = 3.38, 95% C.I.: 2.46–4.66) had higher COVIDâ€19 mortality relative to Whites. Patients with lower educational attainment, high school or less (IRR = 1.93, 95% C.I.: 1.19–3.12, relative to postâ€graduate), Medicaid insurance (IRR = 1.73, 95% C.I.: 1.26–2.39, relative to private), residence in most distressed neighborhoods (fifth quintile IRR = 1.93, 95% C.I.: 1.28–2.90, relative to first quintile), and most urban and most rural had higher adjusted rates of COVIDâ€19 mortality. Among kidney transplant candidates in the United States, social determinants of health in addition to demographic and clinical factors are significantly associated with COVIDâ€19 mortality.
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